1 research outputs found
Electrode Reaction Mechanism of Ag<sub>2</sub>VO<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>4</sub> Cathode
The high capacity of primary lithium-ion
cathode Ag<sub>2</sub>VO<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>4</sub> is facilitated
by both displacement
and insertion reaction mechanisms. Whether the Ag extrusion (specifically,
Ag reduction with Ag metal displaced from the host crystal) and V
reduction are sequential or concurrent remains unclear. A microscopic
description of the reaction mechanism is required for developing design
rules for new multimechanism cathodes, combining both displacement
and insertion reactions. However, the amorphization of Ag<sub>2</sub>VO<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>4</sub> during lithiation makes the investigation
of the electrode reaction mechanism difficult with conventional characterization
tools. For addressing this issue, a combination of local probes of
pair-distribution function and X-ray spectroscopy were used to obtain
a description of the discharge reaction. We determine that the initial
reaction is dominated by silver extrusion with vanadium playing a
supporting role. Once sufficient Ag has been displaced, the residual
Ag<sup>+</sup> in the host can no longer stabilize the host structure
and V–O environment (i.e., onset of amorphization). After amorphization,
silver extrusion continues but the vanadium reduction dominates the
reaction. As a result, the crossover from primarily silver reduction
displacement to vanadium reduction is facilitated by the amorphization
that makes vanadium reduction increasingly more favorable